Pseudo failure of sensing in patients with universal pacemakers and junctional rhythms

1984 
Summary Ventricular fibrillation has been only rarely observed as a complication of cardiac pacing after the advent of demand pacemakers. Automatic AV sequential pacing (DDD) may provide the setting for ventricular fibrillation in patients with junctional rhythms. In this report we present two patients with implanted DDD pacemakers in whom ventricular pacemaker spikes were seen occurring on top of the T wave during episodes of junctional rhythm. This apparent lack of sensing of QRS complexes does not represent pacemaker malfunction, but rather, is the result of physiologic lack of sensing (blanking) which occurs 56 to 100 msec, following the output of the atrial and ventricular channels. During junctional rhythm when the atrial spike occurs at the beginning of a QRS complex the ventricular channel is blanked and does not sense the intrinsic ventricular activity and thus, ventricular output occurs during repolarization. Increasing the maximum pacemaker rate and decreasing the AV delay will reduce the chance occurrence of this phenomenon.
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